Bards of Birmingham
In times of severe school budget cuts budgets, arts and theater programs are often the first to disappear. But in Birmingham, a youth acting group is teaching lessons to any kid with the chops to get on stage. It’s also pushing boundaries in a way that might make some theater traditionalists and parents uncomfortable. From the Southern Education Desk at WBHM, Dan Carsen reports:
The year: 2012.The place: the heart of the city. And Richard, a young woman with a lust for power and
no moral compass, is plotting a violent rise…
That’s from the website of the Bards of Birmingham, a unique youth acting group open to kids of all socioeconomic backgrounds and from all around the state. The website also has a warning about the upcoming production of Shakespeare’s Richard The
Third:
This play is NOT recommended for children younger than 12.
The caution is understandable because it’s a dark, violent play, but it’s also strange because there’s a ten-year-old in the cast.
Dorian Davis has been with Bards since he was eight and acting since he was five. When the play opens on
Friday, he’ll become the Duke of York, albeit a nobleman who isn’t allowed to see the entire production.
But don’t worry. He’s pretty nonchalant about all the rehearsing and the special accommodations. “It’s actually a very simple process. It’s not hard at all,” he says.
Another consummate actor, 16-year-old Morgan Walston, is playing Richard, the lead. And she’s doing
it as a woman.
“I think that it adds an entirely new dimension to the show,” she says. “It makes it all the more
special because it speaks to young women today.”
The production includes a modern soundtrack and even a few film sequences. But it’s by no means
“Shakespeare lite.” Its language and its timeless examination of violence and ambition have simply
been brought forward in time to play out among street gangs and drug addicts.
Founder and director Laura Coulter, who’s spent years working with disadvantaged kids, concedes, “It is a very dark play — I think one of Shakespeare’s darkest plays. But the way we have it set, it deals with issues of youth violence and gang violence. And unfortunately, that’s a reality for a lot of kids today.”
The play includes passionate scenes. The crazed Queen Margaret is portrayed as a heroin
junkie. And of course, there’s plenty of killing to go around. But there’s also an anti-violence message.
Walston, who’s occasionally had trouble getting out of character, points out that the
ambitious sociopath Richard eventually goes insane.
She adds, “I think that theater can reach out to so many people, and I think that if one person — just
one person from the audience — walks away from this show feeling like they understand our world a
little bit better, they understand the violence and they want to stop it as well, then we’ve
accomplished our goal.”
Theater helps kids with academics, too. Beyond boosting their reading, memorizing, speaking, and
self-confidence, the Bards of Birmingham have delved into history and language in a way that’d be
hard to imagine without the kids actually stepping into roles.
As the 16-year-old female king explains, “It’s helped me with critical thinking, and getting a big picture of things. And having to put
that all together and understand what these words mean, because you can’t just say them and expect
the audience to understand it. You have to understand it, as an actor and as a person. So that’s helped
me in not only English but all of my classes.”
Ten-year-old Dorian’s mother Sheree Davis is an English teacher who helps run the group with other
dedicated parents and volunteers. She says a previous Bards production of A Midsummer Night’s
Dream showed that director Laura Coulter has an uncanny way with young actors:
“She had these little five-year-olds, six-year-olds, on stage. They were not afraid. If you
didn’t see it, you’d never believe it. And this wasn’t ‘Shakespeare watered down, kiddie version, let’s
halfway do it.’ It was real Shakespeare. These babies thought nothing of it. Nothing! She just says, ‘Do
it,’ and because she tells them they can, they can.”
She says Dorian’s favorite birthday gift was a book of Shakespearean insults, which he hurls around
constantly, sometimes at bad drivers. His mom and dad understand them, so he has to be careful at
home. But among his friends, a little ignorance of Shakespeare might actually be a good thing … at least
for Dorian’s buddies who are being teased without realizing it.
Bards of Birmingham’s first performance of “Richard The Third” is set for Friday at East Lake United
Methodist Church at 7 p.m. For more information, go to “target=”New_Window”>bardsofbirmingham.com.
Shoes off at the airport? TSA appears to be giving the pesky rule the boot
For nearly twenty years, most air travelers in the U.S. have been required to remove their shoes when going through security. That requirement seems to be ending.
Texas flood recovery efforts face tough conditions as local officials face hard questions
Emergency responders kept hope alive as they combed through fallen trees and other debris that littered the hard-hit central Texas communities on the fifth day after devastating floods killed more than 100.
Q&A: How a conservative Mississippi mom became an advocate for legalizing drugs
Christina Dent talks about founding End It For Good, her journey to rethinking drugs and addiction and how Mississippi can change its approach, too
With Indus Waters Treaty in the balance, Pakistan braces for more water woes
In an unprecedented move, India held the water treaty in abeyance after blaming Pakistan for a deadly attack in April. Pakistan denies involvement in the attack and accuses India of "weaponizing water."
IRS says churches can now endorse political candidates
Since 1954, an IRS rule had barred houses of worship from explicitly endorsing political candidates.
A Planet Money guide to 5 fascinating new econ papers
The Planet Money newsletter rounds up some new economics studies.